As a oneplus one owner, and an avid flasher this leaked roadmap makes me very excited. The source code to Android L is expected to be released November 3rd, next Monday, and this means all those developers can get to work. CyanogenMod has their plans set and I hope they can keep to it because it is quite impressive. On November 3rd they will begin creating CM12 branches, then November 7th they are going to be releasing CM11 M12 and stopping all new development except bug and vulnerability fixes to CM11, next is the big one, they have a tentative release date of December 1st for the first nightlies of CM12. More impressively they are claiming they will have 50% of CM11 features and this is all in under a month. Let’s hope they can stick to it and bring that goodness to devices all around. The new year will bring the first M release then after that we should see the monthly release and completely stable development to continue on. Please don’t let me down CyanogenMod! You can read a lot more in the leaked document after the break.

The plan:
CM 11 will go into Feature Freeze at the end of the week L code becomes available. For the purposes of this post, I will use Novemeber 3rd as the example date of AOSP drop.

Timeline:
# October 31st, CM 11 M12 branching begins
# November 3rd, AOSP releases code to L – all hell breaks loose. CM 12 branches will be created for all relevant projects and AOSP code will be replicated to CM Github. See below for breakdown of CM 12 tasks.
# November 7th, CM 11 M12 released
# November 7th, CM 11 code enters Feature Freeze – all pushes to this branch after this date should be directly tied to addressing a bug or vulnerability. Device merges through DevRel will still be accepted, translations and kernel/device tree changes can continue. Feature Freeze will primarily impact CM apps and Framework – so get your features in ASAP if you have stuff waiting.
# December 1st (tentative) – Nightlies for CM 12 begin, with 50% of CM11 features ported to CM12
# January 2nd, 2015 (tentative) – M releases for CM 12 begin, with feature parity with CM11
# February 2015 – M2 and back to standard monthly releases

Items we are discussing:
1) Should we sign these builds with non test_keys?
2) Device cutoff based on specifications. We expect 512mb devices to be fine, but the issue here will be GPU and non-Kitkat binaries. Expect a hard line here drawn in the sand with respect to device support. This will not be pretty for many older generation devices (pre-ICS).
3) Death of CWM Recovery and impact
4) Unification (see Bringups below)

Items not up for debate:
1) Watering down of SELINUX protections or Encryption by default. These are base protections L is introducing and we should support these items as such. If your device fails to allow encrypting, it will not get a CM sanctioned release.

CM 12 Task list:
We will have the added resources of Inc. assisting us in this effort. As part of this, I will have a Spreadsheet and JIRA project setup to assist in coordination and non-duplication of efforts. If you see something you want to own (that is non-assigned) please feel free to take ownership of it. More on this as the date approaches. Please create a JIRA account if you don’t have one yet.

CAF will play a heavy factor here as well – expect to see a healthy amount of patches come from there in addition to AOSP.

Device bringups:
With the new Nexus devices coming online, the new and existing Nexus platforms will likely be returned to their AOSP configs and move forward from there. For other devices, you all are aware of your own items more than I.

On this note – as a lesson learned from CM11, we need to be a bit smarter when it comes to inheritance, dependencies and unification. I know this item has been in debate before, but I strongly think we should not unify GSM and CDMA variants of platforms. Further, devices that we do not own should not be added to the ‘supported’ column.

Translations:
MB is taking ownership of this and will likely make a new CM 12 project on translate.cyanogenmod.org

Rejoice with me Android world, times of breaking of F5 keys are no longer. Google has pushed the source to AOSP and the fun begins now. Source code is currently being pushed by Google, remember it is a years worth or work so it can take a while, you will be able to find it […]

Well Well Well leave it to Samsung to uglify possible the most beautiful OS out there. That might be harsh but boy do I hate touchwiz, bias aside let’s have a look at how Samsung is doing with their lollipop update to the Galaxy S5. Samsung is now using the LRX02E build of lollipop as […]